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NYC crime plunges — with murders at all-time low — as NYPD boss reveals plan to keep summer streets safe

nyc-crime-plunges-—-with-murders-at-all-time-low-—-as-nypd-boss-reveals-plan-to-keep-summer-streets-safe
NYC crime plunges — with murders at all-time low — as NYPD boss reveals plan to keep summer streets safe

The Big Apple is safer than it’s ever been.

Newly released NYPD crime stats show that major crime is down 9.5% across the five boroughs through the first four months of the year — with documented murders hitting an all-time low in April.

Police reported 19 murders in the city last month, beating the record of 21 set in 2014 and 2017, while the citywide year-to-date number of 76 murders beat the previous number of 86 set in 2018, part of an overall dip in crime that NYPD brass attribute to a focus on gang violence and illegal guns.

A woman places a handgun among several others on a table during the Operation Crossfire Gang Takedown presser.

NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said the historic drop in major crimes is the result of focused policing. Paul Martinka for NY Post

Staten Island has not had a single homicide this year.

“A lot of what you’re seeing in crime numbers that we reported today are seeds that we planted over a year ago now that are really sprouting,” Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch told The Post on Monday. “It takes a while to turn the ship.

“I am quite proud of the members of the New York City Police Department, particularly the 35,000 uniformed members who have taken these strategies we’ve given them and have executed them brilliantly, both brilliantly and selflessly,” Tisch said. “And we will continue to innovate.”

The only stain on the stellar stats are rape reports, which were up more than 10% so far this year compared to the same span last year, with 711 in 2026 compared to 644 in 2025.

A NYPD police vehicle with flashing lights is parked on West 125th Street near Amsterdam Avenue, behind

The Big Apple saw record lows in murder and other violent crimes in April 2026, police said. Christopher Sadowski for NY Post

Police attributed the number to a 2024 change in state law that expanded the definition of rape.

However, all the other numbers are promising, including dips in shootings, transit and public housing crime, and a drop in retail thefts so far this year, the department said.

The numbers are part of an ongoing trend that began more than a year ago.

Overall crime in public housing is down 8.7% this year, with 1,721 reported incidents compared to 1,886 through the first four months of last year, while transit crime — once a major source of concern for rank and file New Yorkers — dipped by 0.6%, or 711 reports this year to 715 last year.

But the most promising numbers came in April.

Burglaries in April were down 21.5% this year, with 857 logged this year compared to 1,053 over the same span in 2025. Auto theft was down 20.2%, with 962 this year from 1,205 last year, while robberies dropped by 13.8%, with 1,053 reports this year and 1,222 last year.

Police and FDNY personnel attend to a stabbing victim on a subway platform.

New NYPD stats show that murders and shootings have dipped so far this year, and hit record lows in April. Luiz C. Ribeiro for NY Post

Felony assaults were down 6% in April, with 2,426 this year and 2,580 last year, the stats show.

Retail thefts dropped by 17.7% last month, down to 3,680 after 4,471 the same time last year.

The Bronx, which last year bucked the trend in crime reduction, saw the biggest declines so far this year, including a 15.5% decrease in murders, with 2,218 compared to 2,626 over the first four months of 2025.

In April, the northernmost borough recorded the fewest murders in history, with just four, and shootings dropped by more than 58% — 13 this year compared to 31 in the same month in 2025 — the second-fewest in recorded history, the NYPD said.

April also saw a more than 35% reduction in hate crimes citywide, to 50 from 77 last year, including a 30.2% drop in antisemitic incidents, with 30 compared to 43 in April 2025.

NYPD officers in uniform raising their right hands during a promotion ceremony.

NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch has focused on recruitment to fill the department’s depleted ranks. Paul Martinka for NY Post

NYPD officers and EMTs treating a stabbing victim outside the Wall St subway station.

An unidentified stabbing victim is treated by NYPD officers and EMTs outside the Wall Street subway station on lower Broadway earlier this month. William Farrington for NY Post

That’s an improvement over the first three months of the year, when the stats showed that hate crimes were up more than 11%, with 55% of those targeting Jewish victims.

Police said the department is also launching a Summer Violence Reduction Plan to keep the trend going in the coming months, which the NYPD is calling the largest deployment in history.

In all, as many as 3,800 of New York’s Finest will be assigned to 72 patrol zones in 40 police precincts, public housing projects and the city subway system, police said.

“We’re doing these zones year round, but we’re also now doing zones to combat specific times of crime,” Tisch said. “Our unprecedented hiring last year actually plays significantly into that zone strategy. Because we have so many young officers as part of our field training, we put those officers on footposts in the places where we know the crime, violent crime, has historically occurred.”

The summer months pose a challenge to police, with a celebration of America’s 250th anniversary and the World Cup soccer championship coming to the New York metropolitan area.

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